Macron rebuke to unvaccinated citizens incurs
anger in parliament
Politicians challenge French president on ‘unfit
language’ after his vow to put lives of 5 million without Covid jabs ‘in the
shit’
Emmanuel Macron, in 2018, with opposition leader
Valérie Pécresse, who yesterday said he was dividing the nation by ‘picking out
good and bad French people’.
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
@achrisafis
Wed 5 Jan
2022 15.48 GMT
Emmanuel
Macron faced criticism from political opponents and heated scenes in parliament
on Wednesday after he gave a deliberately provocative warning to unvaccinated
French people, saying he would make their lives as difficult as possible by
curbing their access to spaces such as cafés and restaurants.
A crucial
parliamentary debate on introducing a proposed Covid-19 “vaccine pass” for
entry to areas such museums and long-distance trains was to resume on Wednesday
afternoon.
The debate
had been suspended just before 2am on Wednesday as lawmakers expressed outrage
at Macron’s newspaper interview in which he said the five million people who
had not had vaccines against the coronavirus were “irresponsible” and that he
“really wanted” to “put them in the shit” by making their daily lives as
complicated as possible.
The French
government spokesman, Gabriel Attal, warned there would be a “supersonic” rise
in Covid cases in France in the coming days and that infections were reaching
stratospheric levels in the Ile-de-France area around Paris as well as some in
other regions.
He said the
situation in hospitals could worsen in the coming weeks. France recorded a
record rate of almost 300,000 Covid infections on Tuesday.
The
government, in a hardening of current rules, is seeking to make it mandatory
for people to show proof of Covid-19 vaccination to enter cafés, restaurants,
museums, cinemas and theatres, or to use long-distance trains. Repeated
disruptions and clashes in parliament, as well as hundreds of proposed
amendments, are leaving the government struggling to push the law through
before its deadline of 15 January.
In an
interview with readers of Le Parisien newspaper published on Wednesday, Macron,
the French president, deliberately used the verb “emmerder”, which is derived
from the word “merde” or “shit” and is widely used in France and considered
vulgar slang. He said that he “really wanted” to put the non-vaccinated “in the
shit” by making their lives very complicated and “limiting as much as possible
their access to activities in social life”.
Macron
said: “We have to tell [the unvaccinated] ... you will no longer be able to go
to a restaurant, you will no longer be able to go for a coffee, you will no
longer be able to go to the theatre, you will no longer be able to go to the
cinema. We will continue to do this, to the end. This is the strategy.” He
explained that he could not force French people to get vaccinated on pain of
prison or fines but life could be made very difficult for them without a
vaccine.
In
parliament, opposition parties slammed Macron’s choice of language as unfit for
a president and worrying in terms of voting through the new law.
Christian
Jacob, president of the opposition, right-wing Les Républicains party, told
parliament: “A president cannot say such things ... I’m in favour of the
vaccine pass but I cannot back a text whose objective is to put French people
in the shit.”
Damien
Abad, from the same party, slammed what he called unworthy, irresponsible and
premeditated remarks which showed “childish cynicism”.
On the
left, there was outrage over more of Macron’s comments, when, referring to
unvaccinated people, he said that when some people’s freedom threatened those
of others they became irresponsible, adding: “Someone irresponsible is not a
citizen.”
Mathilde
Panot, head of the parliamentary group for the left’s La France Insoumise
party, told the house: “We won’t keep debating a text you presented as a
protection of the French people and which is in fact a text to put a part of
the French population in the shit and which has invented [the notion of]
stripping French citizenship – by saying irresponsible people are no longer
French citizens.”
Macron is
expected to seek re-election in the presidential elections this April. However
his key challenger, Valérie Pécresse, of Les Républicains, told French TV that
he was dividing the nation by making some citizens seem better than others.
“It’s not
up to the president of the republic to pick out good and bad French people,”
Pécresse said. France needed a government to “unite people and calm things
down”, she added.
But
government figures and Macron allies stood by the president’s calculated choice
of words and the strategy to make daily life very hard for unvaccinated people.
Macron is
no stranger to rows over off-the-cuff comments or slang, telling interviewers
last month that he regretted some of his comments of the past five years,
saying “I’ve learned to have a lot more respect for everyone”.
But the
vehemence of his comments about unvaccinated people and his deliberate choice
of hard language was aimed at his own electorate, which is almost entirely
vaccinated, and it was also a pre-election message to address the widespread
exasperation at the Covid crisis in France.
Although
France has historically had more vaccine sceptics than many of its neighbours,
it has one of the highest Covid-19 vaccination rates in the EU. A majority of
people is in favour of vaccination; about 90% of French people aged 12 and over
are vaccinated.
The number
of unvaccinated people in French hospital critical wards is higher than those
who are vaccinated, and the health minister has said that the small minority of
unvaccinated people in France, numbering around five million, is too many.
Christophe
Castaner, a key Macron ally and head of his grouping in parliament, said: “The
president’s comments gave clarity, and we need that at this difficult moment
for the country.” Castaner said that the president was giving a view that lots
of French people shared.
Olivier
Véran, the health minister, told parliament, that the aim of Macron’s entire
interview was “the protection of the French people”.
Marc Fesneau,
minister for parliamentary relations, said: “We need unvaccinated people to
hear the message being sent to them by the government, parliament and the
president – which is a message of responsibility.”
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